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  • Bringing pet causes into the church.

    Homeschooling, Herbalism, Vegetarianism, Patriotism people in and out of the church beleive in it. Many LDS people with those ideas impose them as doctrine. Fine to beleive them some are gospel principles others taken to an extreme. Declaring more or less. Some people bring them into the church. Some of those people do apostasize. People that wish God would agree with them even if they don't agree with him or get revelation prophet hasn't had time to reveal yet.
    Last edited by grapevine; 01-10-2013, 06:37 AM.

  • #2
    How about the church bringing pet causes into religion?

    tattoos, voting against same sex unions, etc.

    Comment


    • #3
      How about things like leash laws?
      Everything in life is an approximation.

      http://twitter.com/CougarStats

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Indy Coug View Post
        How about things like leash laws?
        For nursing mothers?

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
          For nursing mothers?
          They get shock collars.
          "Discipleship is not a spectator sport. We cannot expect to experience the blessing of faith by standing inactive on the sidelines any more than we can experience the benefits of health by sitting on a sofa watching sporting events on television and giving advice to the athletes. And yet for some, “spectator discipleship” is a preferred if not primary way of worshipping." -Pres. Uchtdorf

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          • #6
            Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
            For nursing mothers?
            No, you idiot, for the kids that like to run up and down the aisles during sacrament meeting.
            Everything in life is an approximation.

            http://twitter.com/CougarStats

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Indy Coug View Post
              No, you idiot, for the kids that like to run up and down the aisles during sacrament meeting.
              I think the pews should just come with 5-point harnesses. And cupholders.
              "You know, I was looking at your shirt and your scarf and I was thinking that if you had leaned over, I could have seen everything." ~Trial Ad Judge

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Mrs. Funk View Post
                I think the pews should just come with 5-point harnesses. And cupholders.
                And those swinging doors you see with NHL penalty boxes. I think the Kirtland Temple has them.
                Everything in life is an approximation.

                http://twitter.com/CougarStats

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Mrs. Funk View Post
                  I think the pews should just come with 5-point harnesses. And cupholders.
                  You are on to something here
                  "The first thing I learned upon becoming a head coach after fifteen years as an assistant was the enormous difference between making a suggestion and making a decision."

                  "They talk about the economy this year. Hey, my hairline is in recession, my waistline is in inflation. Altogether, I'm in a depression."

                  "I like to bike. I could beat Lance Armstrong, only because he couldn't pass me if he was behind me."

                  -Rick Majerus

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                  • #10
                    Can we bring Pet Sounds into the Church?
                    We all trust our own unorthodoxies.

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                    • #11
                      The church I went to growing up in was older, built in the 50s or so. It had a large chapel. At the back of the chapel, there were a couple of cry rooms, as seen in the professional blu-print below. The cry rooms, entered into through either foyer, had large windows facing the rostrum, and piped in sound from the chapel. When I was a teen, I looked forward to being an adult, thinking I would never set foot in the chapel. We would always head straight to one of the cry-rooms, and lock the door. We could then attend Sacrament Meeting without worrying about our kids, letting them run around or scream within the confines of the cry room as they saw fit.

                      Sadly, none of the buildings I have attended as an adult have had cry rooms.

                      Also, to bring this back to the original point of the OP, I would assume you could bring pets to church if you took them into the cry room.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Sleeping in EQ View Post
                        Can we bring Pet Sounds into the Church?
                        I do every week. It's on my phone.
                        "You interns are like swallows. You shit all over my patients for six weeks and then fly off."

                        "Don't be sorry, it's not your fault. It's my fault for overestimating your competence."

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Clark Addison View Post
                          The church I went to growing up in was older, built in the 50s or so. It had a large chapel. At the back of the chapel, there were a couple of cry rooms, as seen in the professional blu-print below. The cry rooms, entered into through either foyer, had large windows facing the rostrum, and piped in sound from the chapel. When I was a teen, I looked forward to being an adult, thinking I would never set foot in the chapel. We would always head straight to one of the cry-rooms, and lock the door. We could then attend Sacrament Meeting without worrying about our kids, letting them run around or scream within the confines of the cry room as they saw fit.

                          Sadly, none of the buildings I have attended as an adult have had cry rooms.

                          Also, to bring this back to the original point of the OP, I would assume you could bring pets to church if you took them into the cry room.

                          Northshore! That's a great building. Huge kitchen. It also had an awesome accordion door separating the gym from the overflow. It wasn't the semi-soft drape-style door most chapels have, but a giant accordion made from 4-foot wide solid panels, so that when the door was shut, it was like a solid wall. It made for some great indoor soccer games at that chapel.
                          Ain't it like most people, I'm no different. We love to talk on things we don't know about.

                          Dig your own grave, and save!

                          "The only one of us who is so significant that Jeff owes us something simply because he decided to grace us with his presence is falafel." -- All-American

                          "I know that you are one of the cool and 'edgy' BYU fans" -- Wally

                          GIVE 'EM HELL, BRIGHAM!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by falafel View Post
                            Northshore! That's a great building. Huge kitchen. It also had an awesome accordion door separating the gym from the overflow. It wasn't the semi-soft drape-style door most chapels have, but a giant accordion made from 4-foot wide solid panels, so that when the door was shut, it was like a solid wall. It made for some great indoor soccer games at that chapel.
                            That's right! That building had many other great things, including:
                            • A real steeple with a ladder inside (I think it wasn't stairs). you could climb to the top and look out at the beautiful city of Wilmette from a height of about 40 feet.
                            • A stage that went along the long side of the gym. Not so good for Falafel's indoor soccer games, but much bigger than your standard church stage. We often had stake plays and musicals, including "The Sound of Music", "Arsenic and Old Lace", and others
                            • A sacrament room that was really a room, with a door that closed, and a working phone jack. As teachers, we snuck a phone into it, and spent a lot of time in that room.
                            • A few secret rooms (like one above a storage closet) that we used to escape to during Sunday School
                            • Multiple full-sized restrooms. No post-sacrament meeting rush taking up all the urinals.
                            • A full-time custodian that served in the Wehrmacht in WW2 and scared the bejeezus out of us. I still shudder at the memory of the time he caught us at the top of the steeple. He may or may not have threatened to cut my ears off.


                            Plus, in the 80s, you could sometimes see Jimmy Mac there!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Clark Addison View Post
                              That's right! That building had many other great things, including:
                              • A real steeple with a ladder inside (I think it wasn't stairs). you could climb to the top and look out at the beautiful city of Wilmette from a height of about 40 feet.
                              • A stage that went along the long side of the gym. Not so good for Falafel's indoor soccer games, but much bigger than your standard church stage. We often had stake plays and musicals, including "The Sound of Music", "Arsenic and Old Lace", and others
                              • A sacrament room that was really a room, with a door that closed, and a working phone jack. As teachers, we snuck a phone into it, and spent a lot of time in that room.
                              • A few secret rooms (like one above a storage closet) that we used to escape to during Sunday School
                              • Multiple full-sized restrooms. No post-sacrament meeting rush taking up all the urinals.
                              • A full-time custodian that served in the Wehrmacht in WW2 and scared the bejeezus out of us. I still shudder at the memory of the time he caught us at the top of the steeple. He may or may not have threatened to cut my ears off.


                              Plus, in the 80s, you could sometimes see Jimmy Mac there!
                              It wasn't so bad. You could play the ball off the closed doors of the chair and table compartments as long as you kept it below stage-level.

                              Also, you could very occasionally see Jimmy Mac there in the late 90s if his son happened to be getting the priesthood that week!

                              Further north in Gurnee, you could eat dinner at Koz's house quite often.
                              Ain't it like most people, I'm no different. We love to talk on things we don't know about.

                              Dig your own grave, and save!

                              "The only one of us who is so significant that Jeff owes us something simply because he decided to grace us with his presence is falafel." -- All-American

                              "I know that you are one of the cool and 'edgy' BYU fans" -- Wally

                              GIVE 'EM HELL, BRIGHAM!

                              Comment

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